The all-share index (ASI) also fell from 31,430.50 on the last trading day of 2018 to 31,070.06 on January 3, 2019.

This news platform reports that the biggest trader for the day was Diamond Bank with 111.995 million in trades on Wednesday, ahead of Access Bank, Zenith Bank and First Bank Nigeria Holdings (FBNH), which were all well traded.

On the other hand, the top losers for the day are; Nestle, Nigerian Breweries, Dangote Cement, Flour Mills, and Forte Oil.

Julius Berger, International Brewery, Custodian, Vitafoam, and Ecobank led the top gainers at the bourse.

Economic analysts have predicted a withdrawal of portfolio investors from Nigeria in 2019 — in anticipation of the 2019 general elections, and expected economic uncertainty.

The chief executive officer of the Nigerian bourse, Oscar Onyema, said the exchange hoped to achieve a market cap of about N200 trillion at the end of 2015 and the opening of 2016 but reviewed the plans for 2019.

“The targeted 2016 capitalisation was set across five asset classes and would not be possible to achieve considering present realities. We no longer believe that it is possible to meet the target, given where we are today,” he said.

“But we believe that our new strategy up to 2019 has more realistic targets and we are approaching it now in a different perspective.”

The development, however, sends a clear signal that the market cap of the Nigerian exchange will not be anywhere near the $1 trillion target set a few years ago.